These options affect the behavior of Edebug:
Functions to call before Edebug is used. Each time it is set to a new value, Edebug will call those functions once and then reset edebug-setup-hook
to nil
. You could use this to load up Edebug specifications associated with a package you are using, but only when you also use Edebug. See Instrumenting.
If this is non-nil
, normal evaluation of defining forms such as defun
and defmacro
instruments them for Edebug. This applies to eval-defun
, eval-region
, eval-buffer
, and eval-current-buffer
.
Use the command M-x edebug-all-defs to toggle the value of this option. See Instrumenting.
If this is non-nil
, the commands eval-defun
, eval-region
, eval-buffer
, and eval-current-buffer
instrument all forms, even those that don’t define anything. This doesn’t apply to loading or evaluations in the minibuffer.
Use the command M-x edebug-all-forms to toggle the value of this option. See Instrumenting.
When this is non-nil
, all macro arguments will be instrumented in the generated code. For any macro, an edebug-form-spec
overrides this option. So to specify exceptions for macros that have some arguments evaluated and some not, use def-edebug-spec
to specify an edebug-form-spec
.
If this is non-nil
, Edebug saves and restores the window configuration. That takes some time, so if your program does not care what happens to the window configurations, it is better to set this variable to nil
.
If the value is a list, only the listed windows are saved and restored.
You can use the W command in Edebug to change this variable interactively. See Edebug Display Update.
If this is non-nil
, Edebug saves and restores point in all displayed buffers.
Saving and restoring point in other buffers is necessary if you are debugging code that changes the point of a buffer that is displayed in a non-selected window. If Edebug or the user then selects the window, point in that buffer will move to the window’s value of point.
Saving and restoring point in all buffers is expensive, since it requires selecting each window twice, so enable this only if you need it. See Edebug Display Update.
If this variable is non-nil
, it specifies the initial execution mode for Edebug when it is first activated. Possible values are step
, next
, go
, Go-nonstop
, trace
, Trace-fast
, continue
, and Continue-fast
.
The default value is step
. This variable can be set interactively with C-x C-a C-m (edebug-set-initial-mode
). See Edebug Execution Modes.
If this is non-nil
, trace each function entry and exit. Tracing output is displayed in a buffer named *edebug-trace*, one function entry or exit per line, indented by the recursion level.
Also see edebug-tracing
, in Trace Buffer.
If non-nil
, Edebug tests coverage of all expressions debugged. See Coverage Testing.
If non-nil
, continue defining or executing any keyboard macro that is executing outside of Edebug. Use this with caution since it is not debugged. See Edebug Execution Modes.
If non-nil
, the default value of print-length
for printing results in Edebug. See Output Variables.
If non-nil
, the default value of print-level
for printing results in Edebug. See Output Variables.
If non-nil
, the default value of print-circle
for printing results in Edebug. See Output Variables.
If non-nil
, Edebug tries to remove any of its own instrumentation when showing the results of expressions. This is relevant when debugging macros where the results of expressions are themselves instrumented expressions. As a very artificial example, suppose that the example function fac
has been instrumented, and consider a macro of the form:
(defmacro test () "Edebug example." (if (symbol-function 'fac) …))
If you instrument the test
macro and step through it, then by default the result of the symbol-function
call has numerous edebug-after
and edebug-before
forms, which can make it difficult to see the actual result. If edebug-unwrap-results
is non-nil
, Edebug tries to remove these forms from the result.
Edebug binds debug-on-error
to this value, if debug-on-error
was previously nil
. See Trapping Errors.
Edebug binds debug-on-quit
to this value, if debug-on-quit
was previously nil
. See Trapping Errors.
If you change the values of edebug-on-error
or edebug-on-quit
while Edebug is active, their values won’t be used until the next time Edebug is invoked via a new command.
If non-nil
, an expression to test for at every stop point. If the result is non-nil
, then break. Errors are ignored. See Global Break Condition.
Number of seconds to pause when a breakpoint is reached and the execution mode is trace or continue. See Edebug Execution Modes.
Whether or not to pause for edebug-sit-for-seconds
on reaching a breakpoint. Set to nil
to prevent the pause, non-nil
to allow it.
By default, this alist contains one entry with the key edebug
and a list of three functions, which are the default implementations of the functions inserted in instrumented code: edebug-enter
, edebug-before
and edebug-after
. To change Edebug’s behavior globally, modify the default entry.
Edebug’s behavior may also be changed on a per-definition basis by adding an entry to this alist, with a key of your choice and three functions. Then set the edebug-behavior
symbol property of an instrumented definition to the key of the new entry, and Edebug will call the new functions in place of its own for that definition.
A function run by Edebug after it wraps the body of a definition or closure. After Edebug has initialized its own data, this function is called with one argument, the symbol associated with the definition, which may be the actual symbol defined or one generated by Edebug. This function may be used to set the edebug-behavior
symbol property of each definition instrumented by Edebug.
To inspect or modify Edebug’s instrumentation before it is used, set this variable to a function which takes one argument, an instrumented top-level form, and returns either the same or a replacement form, which Edebug will then use as the final result of instrumentation.
Copyright © 1990-1996, 1998-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU GPL license.
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Edebug-Options.html